
pixel skylines

Andulka

JVL
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Kiana Khansmith
Three Goblin Art

Kaledo Art
styofa doing anything
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Mike Driver
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

@theartofmadeline
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Product Placement
Cosimo Galluzzi
taylor price

oozey mess
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
DEAR READER
cherry valley forever
seen from United States

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@burning-leather-hell-age
strategic removal of letters via Shitty_Car_Mods
Speaking of images that have resonated throughout decades of my life, I finally figured out who painted this book cover - Alex Ebel.
Mandy
The salt statue or The wife of Lot, 1899 by Eugène Viala
那覇市営壷川東住宅(1985~92年) 那覇市壷川 2018
Peel Session 1983
Sakai Hōitsu (1761–1828) — Crows in the Moonlight , early 19th century
Woodblock print; ink and color on paper, Princeton University Art Museum
Concrete Utopia: Jasenovac Memorial Complex
After World War II, Yugoslavia memorialized its fight against Axis powers, and the millions of wartime casualties suffered, with monuments like this one on the site of a razed concentration camp in Jasenovac, Croatia. The “Stone Flower” serves as a grave marker and an expression of a desire to unify the multiethnic country by demarcating its territory after the war with sites of collective remembrance. Explore Concrete Utopia. … [Bogdan Bogdanovic. “Jasenovac Memorial Complex.” 1959-66. Photo: Valentin Jeck, commissioned by The Museum of Modern Art, 2016]
Procsccini, detail Beheading of St. John Baptist Gallerie d'Italia, Piazxa Scala Milano #MyMilan #Milan #Italy #travel #Art #ArtHistory #Architecture #culture #DarkTourism #lovetotravel #travelblogger #TravelEurope #photoblogger ©Blackpaint20
Calendrier Magique
Designed and published in Paris in 1895, the Calendrier Magique was conceived by Austin De Croze and illustrated by the Italian lithographer Manuel Orazi. While the history of these two individuals remains somewhat obscure, even a casual glance at the contents and illustrations of their unusual work shows that De Croze and Orazi possessed a sophisticated familiarity with the Esoteric traditions of the fin de siècle era. Every page of the Calendrier Magique evokes the decadent, occult Paris of Gerard Encausse, Oswald Wirth, and Karl Huysmans. The Art Nouveau illustrations of Orazi are especially evocative. Simon Finch writes that the work “was highly praised by Caillet as ‘fort original et d'une rare exécution artistique’; he added that no contemporary artist - save Félicien Rops - had managed ‘so felicitously to combine sadism, satanism and the macabre’. The Calendrier Magique - so the legend goes - was published in a limited print run of 777 copies, making it quite a rarity among collectors.
For all 12 months, here: http://www.sofia-albertsson.se/2017/12/stranger-than-kindness-keys-rain-like-heavens-hair/
squad is over we’re cults now